With the opening weekend in the rearview mirror, the foundation has been laid for this season’s College Football Playoff. On Monday, ESPN revealed its updated CFP top 12 after a wild slate of Week 1 games.
There were no shortage of surprising outcomes this weekend. Florida State shocked No. 8 Alabama, Arch Manning and Texas came up short against Ohio State, and Miami downed reigning national runner-up Notre Dame.
ESPN took all of these outcomes and more into account while making its updated CFP projections. With 12 teams to cover, along with a bracket projection, let’s dive into ESPN’s CFP predictions.
For the first time in five seasons, LSU won its season opener, and it was a big one. On Saturday, the Tigers defeated No. 4 Clemson in convincing 17-10 fashion. While LSU’s offense was impressive, its defense stole the show.
LSU defensive coordinator Blake Baker coached his unit to perfection, holding Clemson just 261 yards of total offense. In the loss, Clemson QB Cade Klubnik connected on just 50% of his pass attempts for 230 yards. Klubnik didn’t throw a touchdown, but did toss an interception in the loss.
After Ohio State both of its coordinators this offseason, there were questions around the program entering this season. The Buckeyes silenced any doubters on Saturday with its emphatic 14-7 triumph over Texas.
Once again, Ohio State’s defense was the story in the win. The Buckeyes’ suffocating defense made Texas’ typically dominant offense look lost on the field. In the end, Ohio State held Texas to 336 yards and fewer points than it scored in a single game all of last season.
Carson Beck had a down year last season at Georgia, and many analysts weren’t convinced he would regain his footing in Miami. Alas, the former All-SEC Second-Team selection looked like a Heisman candidate in the Hurricanes’ 27-24 win over No. 6 Notre Dame on Sunday.
In the triumph, Beck completed 20-of-his-31 pass attempts for 205 yards and two touchdowns, without throwing an interception. Perhaps more importantly, Miami’s defense looked much improved, with new DC Corey Hetherman calling the shots.
Penn State is one of the favorites to win the national title this season, and the team looked the part in its season-opening 46-11 win over Nevada. Every player did their part, starting with quarterback Drew Allar, who threw for 217 yards and a touchdown on a ridiculous 84.6% completion percentage.
Running backs Nick Singleton and Kaytron Allen looked as good as ever too. Singleton and Allen combined for three touchdowns in the win before being sidelined. If the Nittany Lions can play to their potential, it’ll be difficult for any Big Ten team to top them this year.
After an abysmal 2-10 campaign in 2024, Florida State is officially back like it never left. The Seminoles kicked off their revenge campaign with a jaw-dropping 31-17 win over Alabama on Saturday.
In the win, quarterback Thomas Castellanos backed up his previous trash talk, logging 230 total yards of offense. It was a statement performance for the Seminoles, who were ridiculed after their disappointing output last fall.
Georgia’s 45-7 win over Marshall on Saturday didn’t garner nearly as much attention as some of the other victories this weekend. Alas, fans would be foolish to overlook the Bulldogs’ complete performance.
Georgia was functioning on all cylinders in the win, but nobody outshined new QB1 Gunner Stockton. Opinions were mixed on Stockton after he took over for Georgia late in the season when Beck suffered a UCL injury. Nonetheless, Stockton looked like a viable leader on Saturday, pacing the team in rushing yards while throwing for 190 yards and two scores.
Oregon has been in the background this offseason despite being the No. 1 team in the country for the majority of last season. In fairness, Oregon is only returning five starters from last season and had a less-than-glorious exit from the CFP.
Alas, Oregon showed no signs of weakness in its 59-13 win over Montana State on Saturday. In the win, the Ducks poured on 506 yards of total offense. The team’s transfer stars took to Dan Lanning‘s system like ducks to water.
Brett Davis-Imagn Images
Tennessee fans are feeling much better about losing Nico Iamaleava to the transfer portal this offseason after handily defeating Syracuse 45-26 this weekend. In the win, transfer QB Joey Aguilar notched 247 passing yards and three TDs, without throwing a pick.
The Volunteers’ ground game was strong as well. Running backs Star Thomas and DeSean Bishop combined for 174 rushing yards and a touchdown. With the win, the CFP selection committee should have improved confidence in the Volunteers moving forward.
Notre Dame is the first team in ESPN’s CFP projections that didn’t win its season opener. While the Fighting Irish didn’t walk away with a win on Sunday, they didn’t lose any respect, either.
With a first-time starting quarterback leading the way, Notre Dame had Miami on the ropes. If the Fighting Irish can cut down on their turnovers moving forward and hone their strengths, they could be a legitimate contender for the national title.
Texas simply didn’t look impressive on Saturday. And yet, it only lost to the reigning national champions by a single touchdown. With an entire season to shore up their weaknesses, the Longhorns are far from out of the fight.
Namely, quarterback Arch Manning will need to step up his game. The redshirt sophomore QB struggled to find a rhythm early against the Buckeyes and threw a pivotal interception after appearing to grow desperate.
Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
South Carolina has a difficult path ahead of it, but it certainly started off its season on a strong note Sunday. In the victory, quarterback LaNorris Sellers picked right up where he left off last season, logging 209 passing yards, 25 rushing yards and two touchdowns.
Additionally, wide receiver Nyck Harbor showed significant improvements from last season after opting not to run track and field this spring. Harbor was Sellers’ go-to target and finished the game with 99 yards and a touchdown.
Clemson fans didn’t walk away from the team’s 17-10 loss to LSU feeling encouraged. Yet, ESPN doesn’t believe Dabo Swinney and Co. should hang their heads just yet.
Clemson’s offense simply wasn’t up to par in the loss and has plenty of time to improve this season. The Tigers’ offensive particularly needs to improve. LSU put Clemson QB Cade Klubnik under pressure all night and made it difficult for the Heisman candidate to find a groove in the game.
ESPN’s CFP Bracket Projection
First-round byes
No. 1 LSU (SEC champ) No. 2 Ohio State (Big Ten champ) No. 3 Miami (ACC champ) No. 4 Penn State
First-round games
On campus, Dec. 19 and 20
No. 12 USF (American champ) at No. 5 Florida State No. 11 Arizona State (Big 12 champ) at No. 6 Georgia No. 10 Texas at No. 7 Oregon No. 9 Notre Dame at No. 8 Tennessee
Quarterfinal games
At the Goodyear Cotton Bowl, Capital One Orange Bowl, Rose Bowl Presented by Prudential and Allstate Sugar Bowl on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1.
No. 12 USF/No. 5 Florida State winner vs. No. 4 Penn State No. 11 Arizona State/No. 6 Georgia winner vs. No. 3 Miami No. 10 Texas/No. 7 Oregon winner vs. No. 2 Ohio State No. 9 Notre Dame/No. 8 Tennessee winners vs. No. 1 LSU
A messy player-school NIL dispute just got messier.
Less than a month after Georgia sued Damon Wilson II for transfer damages, Missouri’s star pass rusher filed a countersuit against Georgia, setting up a potentially precedent-setting NIL legal battle between an athlete and school.
“Recent court decisions have changed the landscape of college football and paved the way for NIL payments,” Bogdan Susan, one of Wilson’s attorneys, told PowerMizzou.com. “What has not changed is that college football players still have only four years of competition to realize their potential and try to achieve their dreams of playing in the NFL. A lot of trust is put into the colleges and coaching staffs. Coaches are not limited to four years of competition. The University of Georgia has been playing football for over 133 years. Damon has four years to play and he spent half of that time at Georgia. Decisions to transfer are not always about money. Stopping a young man from pursuing his dreams by forcing him to pay money that he has not received is just wrong.”
Wilson filed a 42-page complaint in Boone County, Mo. on Tuesday morning, an action first reported by The Athletic, alleging a civil conspiracy involving Georgia and its collective for trying to “penalize Wilson for his decision to transfer.” The defendants named in the suit are the University of Georgia Athletic Association, the Classic City Collective and former Classic City CEO’s Matt Hibbs and Taylor Potts.
The suit alleges Georgia didn’t immediately put Wilson’s name in the transfer portal last January and also lied about his buyout, telling multiple unnamed Power 4 programs that they’d owe Georgia $1.2 million if Wilson transferred to their school.
“UGAA’s actions signal that it is stuck in its old ways. The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade. Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights. 23. No longer willing to endure UGAA’s harassment campaign and ready to hold UGAA and CCC accountable for their tortious interference with his business expectations when he entered the portal and chose to transfer, their breach of the Term Sheet’s Confidentiality Agreement, and UGAA’s efforts to tarnish his reputation as he pursues his lifelong dream of playing in the NFL, Wilson brings this action.”
Wilson’s claim hinges largely on the document signed by the player, the Classic City Collective and Hibbs and Potts. The involved parties signed a term sheet. Wilson’s suit claims the term sheet is not binding.
“The Term Sheet stated that it ‘preced[es]’ a ‘full License and Option Agreement,’ and specifically provided: ‘In the event the parties agree to this Term Sheet, then they shall work cooperatively to set forth these terms in a full legal contract including all the standard provisions of NIL licensing agreements.’ The Term Sheet further stated that Wilson ‘should seek legal counsel before finalizing the full License and Option Agreement.'”
The suit claims that Wilson, as part of a group of Georgia players, “without counsel present and with UGAA employees telling him that time was of the essence.” The suit alleges not only that Wilson signed the term sheet under pressure, but that the full binding contract was never presented, much less signed.
“The parties thus never executed a legally binding agreement containing any of the provisions in the Term Sheet,” the suit states.
The suit further claims that UGAA and the Classic City Collective violated the term sheet’s confidentiality agreement “by disclosing one or more of the Term Sheet’s provisions to sympathetic news outlets and affiliates to tarnish Wilson’s reputation.”
This is believed to be the first time a school and an athlete have taken each other to court over an NIL issue. The resolution could depend on whether or not Wilson’s NIL agreement with Georgia’s collective was a binding contract.
The UGAA lawsuit against Wilson recently filed seeks liquidated damages of $390,000. Wilson’s countersuit claims those funds are not liquidated damages, but instead penalties for transferring from Georgia.
“A penalty provision masquerading as a “liquidated damages” provision is unenforceable,” the filing reads. “It makes no effort to reasonably quantify damages that are difficult to ascertain, and it serves only to penalize Wilson for his decision to enter the transfer portal.”
Wilson’s suit also alleges defamation against UGAA, referencing a statement from Chief Marketing Officer Steven Drummond made to ESPN: “When the University of Georgia Athletic Association enters binding agreements with student-athletes, we honor our commitments and expect student-athletes to do the same.”
The suit clams “UGAA’s statement implies that Wilson is dishonest in his business dealings and his profession, impairing his ability to enter into future NIL agreements, and harms his reputation.”
Wilson was one of the top edge defenders in the SEC in 2025, recording 9 sacks, tied for third-most in the SEC, and 49 total pressures, second-most in the SEC. He is currently expected to play for Missouri in the Taxslayer Gator Bowl on Saturday. He has not declared his intent for next season. He has until January 14 to enter his name into the NFL Draft as an underclassman.
This story will be updated as more information becomes available.
Cody Goodwin covers the Missouri Tigers for PowerMizzou and 247Sports. Follow him on Twitter/X at @codygoodwin.
PowerMizzou.com publisher Gabe DeArmond contributed to this report.
Missouri linebacker Damon Wilson II is suing the University of Georgia’s athletic association and its Classic City Collective, which he says is attempting to “punish” him through a “coordinated campaign” for his decision to transfer. Earlier this month, Georgia sought $390,000 in damages citing a clause in Wilson’s NIL contract after his departure to another SEC program.
The lawsuit initiated what appears to be a landmark case in college football, which now includes the plaintiff fighting back with his own legal documents. Highlighting a 42-page complaint filed Dec. 23 in Boone County, Missouri, Wilson’s attorneys claim Georgia tried to sabotage their client’s potential destinations after employees “falsely” told “at least three programs that — if Wilson left Georgia and joined their programs — Wilson would be subject to a $1.2 million buyout.”
The complaint claims Georgia “continued to assert similar demands in an effort to harass Wilson and impair his on-field performance for a conference rival” throughout the 2025 regular season.
Wilson signed a new deal with Georgia’s NIL collective in December 2024 during the College Football Playoff, but entered the transfer portal and moved to Missouri weeks later. While documents show Georgia paid Wilson $30,000 under the terms of the new deal before his departure, the athletic department states Wilson owed a $390,000 lump sum within 30 days of his exit.
The contract was a 14-month agreement worth $500,000, which was set to be paid in monthly $30,000 increments. Georgia would have also paid Wilson two $40,000 retention bonuses at the end of the NCAA transfer portal windows. The exit clause states that Wilson would owe a lump-sum payment worth the total he would have received if he remained with the program through the duration of the contract.
“The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade,” Wilson’s complaint said. “Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights.”
The previous term sheet signed by Wilson, his representation argues, was not a “legally binding document” as Georgia states.
“CCC failed even to present Wilson what it promised in the Term Sheet — a “full License and Option Agreement,” the lawsuit said. “The parties thus never executed a legally binding agreement containing any of the provisions in the Term Sheet.”
Wilson appeared in 26 games at Georgia from during the 2023 and 2024 seasons and projected to be an impact starter prior to his decision to leave the program.
Georgia’s NIL collective’s two now-former CEOs — Matt Hibbs and Tanner Potts — were named in the lawsuit. Wilson seeks a “fair and reasonable amount of damages” for “financial and reputational harm he has suffered” in the aftermath of playing at Missouri this season.
A University of Missouri athlete countersued his former university on Tuesday.
Mizzou Football’s defensive end, Damon Wilson II, is countersuing the University of Georgia for damages regarding Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money.
The lawsuit comes after the University of Georgia Athletic Association (UGAA) sued Wilson for allegedly violating a Term Sheet that he had signed in December 2024 during the College Football Playoffs.
The paperwork was presented to him by the Classic City Collective, Inc. (CCC), a supporter-funded platform used by UGAA to license student-athletes’ NIL rights, according to court records.
Wilson’s legal counsel argued that the signed Term Sheet was never a legally binding contract, as the documentation included the line, “In the event the parties agree to this Term Sheet, then they shall work cooperatively to set forth these terms in a full legal contract, including all the standard provisions of NIL licensing agreements.”
His attorney further noted that the CCC never presented him with what was promised in the Term Sheet or used it as a base to create a full legal License and Option Agreement contract.
Court documents reported that four days after Wilson signed the Term Sheet, and no legally binding contract was created, finalized or signed, CCC sent him $30,000 on Christmas Day.
Approximately one week later, Georgia’s season ended in a loss and the defensive end entered the transfer portal, eventually deciding to transfer to the University of Missouri to expand his opportunities of getting exposed to the NFL.
Less than three weeks later, CCC issued a termination notice to Wilson following his transfer announcement, which included a claim that would have required him to pay “all remaining License Fees that would have otherwise been payable under” the Term Sheet, which was a total of $390,000.
The lawsuit accused UGAA of violating the confidentiality agreement by publicly disclosing the full, signed Term Sheet to news outlets, on the public docket and by contacting at least three major college football programs to falsely claim that if Wilson left Georgia, then he would be subject to a 1.2 million buyout.
“UGAA’s actions signal that it is stuck in its old ways. The era of universities exerting total control over the career trajectories and rights of their student-athletes has been dead for nearly half a decade,” read the lawsuit. “Nonetheless, UGAA has demonstrated that, left to its own devices, it will attempt to exploit every loophole to deprive student-athletes like Wilson of the ability to reap the benefits of full and fair competition for their NIL rights.”
The petition stated that Wilson will not endure harassment from the UGAA and hold them accountable for interfering with his “business expectations when he entered the portal and chose to transfer, their breach of the Term Sheet’s Confidentiality Agreement and UGAA’s efforts to tarnish his reputation as he pursues his lifelong dream of playing in the NFL.”
Turns out, the rivalry between Notre Dame and USC was close to being saved earlier this season. According to Ryan Kartje of The Los Angeles Times, the two programs almost announced a 2026 game had been scheduled. However, the agreement Notre Dame put together with the College Football Playoff changed things for the Trojans.
“USC and Notre Dame were close to announcing a continuation of their rivalry earlier this season, a source told @latimes,” Kartje said via X. “USC was ready to compromise and play the ’26 game in November But then USC learned of ND’s agreement w/ the CFP to have a guaranteed spot if in the top 12.
“In light of Notre Dame’s agreement re: CFP, which USC hadn’t been aware of, USC reversed course on its plan to compromise and insisted that the ND game be played in Week Zero in 2026. A source said they felt ND’s agreement was ‘a material advantage’ that could disadvantage USC.”
Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua revealed this agreement, also called an MOU, with the CFP after this past Selection Sunday. If the Irish are placed inside the top-12 moving forward, they are guaranteed a spot in the field. The same is true if the CFP expands to 14 teams, as Notre Dame would need to be ranked inside the top 13.
If the MOU were in effect this season, Notre Dame would have gotten into the field over Miami despite being ranked lower. Miami also held the head-to-head matchup, jumping Notre Dame at the last possible moment. This scenario playing out against USC was apparently a concern for administration in Los Angeles.
“Had Notre Dame had its new agreement with the CFP committee in place in 2025, the Irish would’ve gotten in over Miami, who beat them earlier in the season,” Kartje said via X. “That scenario was a concern to USC.”
Now, for just the second time since World War II, there will not be a game between Notre Dame and USC. It’s one of the more storied rivalries in college football despite the two never sharing a conference. We are not too far away from 100 games between them, sitting at 93 after the 2025 edition took place in South Bend.
Notre Dame already has a game on the ’26 and ’27 schedule to replace USC. A home-and-home series will take place with BYU, a team they could have played in the Pop-Tarts Bowl in a few days.
HONOLULU (Island News) — When conversations turn to Name, Image and Likeness in college sports, the focus often lands on eye-popping numbers and national stars.
This year’s Heisman Trophy winner, Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, reportedly earned more than two million dollars through NIL deals — a figure that has become shorthand for how dramatically the college athletics landscape has changed.
But far from the national spotlight, NIL is quietly reshaping opportunity in a very different way.
At the University of Hawaiʻi, athletes are discovering that NIL isn’t only about endorsements or social media reach. It’s about identity, adaptability, and learning how to navigate a world where athletic performance and personal story now intersect.
For kicker Kansei Matsuzawa, that intersection arrived unexpectedly.
Matsuzawa came to Hawaiʻi from Japan to play football, improve his English, and test himself at the highest level of college athletics. Branding and marketing were never part of the plan. Yet in today’s NIL era, those skills have become part of the education.
“As a business… I can apply to the business side,” Matsuzawa said, reflecting on what he’s learned through the process.
That lesson took shape through an NIL partnership with Honolulu Coffee Company, a collaboration rooted not in star power, but in storytelling. The result was the Tokyo Toe Blend, a coffee inspired by Matsuzawa’s journey from Japan to Hawaiʻi and the precision and discipline required of a kicker — details that mirror both his athletic and personal path.
For Honolulu Coffee, the partnership represented a shift in how businesses think about college athletes.
“As we really started to think about his story… and the University of Hawaiʻi athletics this year too,” said Erica Mounsey, the company’s chief operating officer. “We think this is just the beginning of many partnerships to come in the future.”
Rather than chasing national recognition, the company leaned into authenticity — choosing an athlete whose background aligned with its values and local customer base. In the evolving NIL marketplace, that approach is becoming increasingly important. Consumers respond not just to names, but to narratives that feel real and connected to place.
Those same changes are being felt inside athletic departments.
At UH, NIL has introduced a new layer of complexity to college sports — one that requires creativity, coordination, and a long-term view of athlete development beyond competition.
“We’re thinking about, okay, is there… we gotta be thinking about all at the same time,” said Matt Elliott, UH’s athletic director. “We’re putting together packages… a lot of creative problem solving.”
That problem solving reflects a broader reality: athletes are now brands, universities are strategic partners, and local businesses are part of the ecosystem. Success depends not on one viral moment, but on relationships built thoughtfully and sustainably.
For Mounsey, that mindset defines the future of NIL in Hawaiʻi.
“Anything’s possible… with a goal in mind,” she said.
As NIL continues to evolve nationwide, Hawaiʻi’s athletes are navigating it in a uniquely local way — balancing culture, community, and opportunity. For Matsuzawa, the experience has expanded his understanding of what it means to be a student-athlete.
The kicks still matter. So do the wins and losses. But increasingly, so does the knowledge gained off the field — lessons in storytelling, adaptability, and self-advocacy that will carry far beyond college football.
In Hawaiʻi, NIL isn’t just changing the game.
It’s changing what athletes take with them when the game ends.